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I'm not sure this belongs here, but it's not necessarily a carrier-specific question. I'm looking at booking a set of flights on a single reservation with fare breaks (through a TA) and was wondering: in case of a misconnect on one of the segments that isn't on the same ticket as the previous, will the operating carrier for the flight causing the misconnect still accommodate me? Eg: YYC-EWR(break) EWR-LON-FRA Will the carrier operating YYC-EWR (UA obviously) provide onwards travel if there's a delay causing me to miss EWR-LON? Or is this treated as though I had booked the two tickets separately? |
Can't your TA book you on a single ticket? If they are spearate tickets then no, the airline are not obligated to accommodate you.
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AA does IIRC, but UA doesn't.
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If it is all on one reservation then the ticketing carrier is responsible for accommodating you. You can determine the ticketing carrier from the first three digits of the ticket number, or by asking the TA. It doesn't matter who caused the misconnect; the carrier that issued the ticket is responsible.
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Originally Posted by cbn42
(Post 22567656)
If it is all on one reservation then the ticketing carrier is responsible for accommodating you. You can determine the ticketing carrier from the first three digits of the ticket number, or by asking the TA. It doesn't matter who caused the misconnect; the carrier that issued the ticket is responsible.
To OP: you (or your TA) seem to think about 2 tickets in one PNR. You wont be protected in case of irrops. You might get lucky, depending on the airlines involved, but you can not count on it. |
I ultimately ended up booking the planned itinerary. I left a day of padding between the two tickets.
Originally Posted by emma69
(Post 22562991)
Can't your TA book you on a single ticket? If they are spearate tickets then no, the airline are not obligated to accommodate you.
Looking at my confirmation email raised another question: I was only given one ticket number for that itinerary, as has been the case for all of my TATL flights so far. I'm guessing this is standard practice even though there are two (round-trip) fares (PHL-LON, LON-YYC) involved in the itinerary? Would I only be given separate tickets when "combining" one-way fares? |
Originally Posted by pewpew
(Post 22571016)
Looking at my confirmation email raised another question: I was only given one ticket number for that itinerary, as has been the case for all of my TATL flights so far. I'm guessing this is standard practice even though there are two (round-trip) fares (PHL-LON, LON-YYC) involved in the itinerary? Would I only be given separate tickets when "combining" one-way fares?
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Originally Posted by cbn42
(Post 22567656)
If it is all on one reservation then the ticketing carrier is responsible for accommodating you. You can determine the ticketing carrier from the first three digits of the ticket number, or by asking the TA. It doesn't matter who caused the misconnect; the carrier that issued the ticket is responsible.
I think there are well-defined IATA rules for how this is handled so as to avoid buck-passing, but that they're not as simple as "always issuing carrier." |
Originally Posted by Steve M
(Post 22574115)
I'm not sure that's true. Consider a multi-carrier ticket where there's a connection in a city where neither carrier is the issuing carrier. In the event of a mis-connect, why would the issuing carrier be responsible, since they were operating neither of the flights? Also, it's quite likely in that situation that the issuing carrier isn't operating either of those particular flights because they have no operations in that city and possibly country. If that's the case, how are they supposed to make arrangements for an affected passenger when they have no flights or even presence at that city or even country?
I think there are well-defined IATA rules for how this is handled so as to avoid buck-passing, but that they're not as simple as "always issuing carrier." I am not completely familiar with IATA rules, but I know that it is generally the issuing carrier that is responsible. There might be exceptions, but I don't think they are relevant here. |
One ticket and you will be "protected" in that the carrier causing the delay will rebook. Two tickets -- and I stress tickets -- and there is no obligation to rebook, other than on AA which voluntarily takes on this obligation.
Nonetheless, US carriers seem to rebook even on multiple tickets. But, you should expect to be at the back of the line and be acommodated after all other connecting pax are acommodated. And, no carrier, including AA, will pick up the tab for your hotel + food if that becomes an issue. |
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